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M25 Egham Great Fosters

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Post to the south Thorpe Green



Black Lake Close
Black Lake Christmas Tree Farm

M25

Stroude Road
Great Fosters. Very posh hotel, on this site since 1931. The estate dates from the 1550s when it was owned by William Warham and called Imworth. By 1622 it was called Fosters and owned by John Doddridge and in 1639, the manor was owned by Judge Robert Foster. At the Restoration in 1660 he became Lord Chief Justice of the King's Bench. It had many owners and was used as an asylum from 1767 until the early 19th becoming a private home in the 1860s. In 1918, W H Romaine-Walker refurbished and extended the house and the gardens with G H Jenkins. It opened as a hotel in 1930. A tithe barn brought from Malden was installed in 1930, staff accommodation replaced glasshouses and a Conference Centre put in the coach house. In 1989 the Painted Hall and Orangery were built in the Willow Garden.
Great Fosters House. This was built c 1550-1610 and extended in 1635. It is in red brick with stone dressings with staircases housed in square-topped brick towers. Kitchens were installed in the 20th.
Stables are of 'very simple Artisan brickwork' with the carved initials of the owner. They became a garage in the 1930s and a Conference Centre in the 1970s
Gardens. The surroundings of the house include a U-shaped moat which may be Saxon and it is linked to brick loggias. The area includes a 16th sundial around which is a yew-hedged 'Tudor' garden. Beyond this a lawn slopes gently down to a stream on the eastern boundary of the site. A path leads over a steeply arched wooden bridge spanning the south arm of the moat and a wooden pergola runs parallel with the stream to a yew-enclosed rose garden with a circular pool and fountain. There is also a swimming pool with wooden changing rooms from 1928.  Trees here were badly affected by the storms of 1987 and 1990 and a lime avenue was severed by the M25 now ends in a grassed ampitheatre. There is a kitchen garden, now grassed over and enclosed by high brick walls and yews.
Black Lake Farm. This is now converted into housing

Thorpe Bypass
Crabtree Corner

Sources
Black Lake Christmas Tree Farm. Web site
Great Fosters. Web site
Historic England. Web site


M25 Thorpe Lea

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Post to the south Egham Great Fosters
Post to the north Egham


Ambleside Way
This is part of an estate of houses which appear to be on the site of part of Thorpe Lee Nurseries which lay to the east of Thorpe Lea Road

Clockhouse Lane East
Clockhouse – this seems to be a house with a clock on the front of it. It is said to be, or to be the successor to, the Old Pipe House and from the name it is inferred that clay pipes were made there. This was a Free Public House which once stood “at the junction of the roads from Thorpe, Staines, and Egham, to Chertsey’ and this is noted on maps from 1768.
Clockhouse Mushroom Farm
Clockhouse Nurseries. This site on the south side of the road is a remnant of what was once a large nursery and market garden owned for nearly a century by the Mason family and employing many local people.  The southern section was sold to Halls for gravel extraction and the area now still in use declined to selling only cut flowers and its present status is not clear.

Clock house Lane West
Homestead Cottage. This is a 14th or 15th timber-framed house

Manorcrofts Road
Egham Bowls Club. This was founded in 1922 as the Egham and District Bowling Club. They leased some old grazing land from the Baron and Baroness de Worms, who were also the first Presidents and bought the freehold in 1948. The old club house was demolished in 1975. In 1982 money was raised to build an Indoor Bowls facility following an exchange of land with Amey Roadstone – and this went ahead despite a withdrawal of Sports Council funding.

M25

Stroude Road
Milton Park was a large house, the home of the de Worms family. From 1960 to 1994 Johnson Wax Ltd has research laboratories here and it had previously been the British Leather Manufacturers Research Association.
An office building was erected here in 2009 and bought as an European Head Office for Belron. It is a highly sustainable building with a traditional reinforced concrete  slabs structure. Belron are suppliers of glass for automobiles, a company originating in South Africa in the late 19th.
Lodge to Milton Park. This red brick house  is dated 1865 on a wall tablet with the initial W below a coronet. There is also a replica extension dated 1888
Brick gate piers to Milton Park linked by a 18th brick serpentine boundary wall.

Thorpe Lea Road
Thorpe Lea Manor. This was bought by Edward Blackett in 1774 and was then called Thorpe Lea House. He sold it in  1802 he sold it and moved to another house also called Thorpe Lea House. The original house remained a private house until requisitioned in the Second World War.  Later it was badly burnt in a fire but was rebuilt. It is now offices for Kerry Foods and associated provisions companies..

Vicarage Road
Laurel Cottage. Early 19th stables to Thorpe Lea House.  It is also said that a section of one of the pillars from the front entrance is now in the garden.
Egham Cricket Club.   Egham Cricket Club was hiring rooms in 1860 and it is claimed that cricket was played here in 1750. In 1913 the club was formed as Somers X1, after a sponsor. In 1923 space was found by Egham Football Club in Green Lane. The club was then called Denham Cricket Club as there was also another club called the Egham Town Cricket Club which was later disbanded. In 1928 the Club moved to land near the Runnymede Hotel. In 1931 land in Windsor Road was leased and needed to be cleaned and converted and they were given an old wooden bungalow as a pavilion. In 1969 Egham Urban District Council leased the site in Vicarage Road to the club and this too needed conversion. The original pavilion from the Windsor Road site was re-erected where it is today. The wooden core is the original.
Gleville Farm. Seems to be a tyre depot
Egham Sports Centre. Local authority sports complex now called “Achieve”.

Wesley Drive
Manorcroft Primary School. Egham County Secondary School appears to have preceded it on this site

Wickham Lane
Wycham Lane was the previous name
Thorpe Lea Farm
Thorpe Lee House. This was built by North East based grandee Edward Blackett and became the home of his son and later family members until the early 20th. By the 1930s it had become a hotel and during the Second World War it was requisitioned. It was eventually demolished for the M25.


Sources
Blacketts of North East England. Web site
British Listed Buildings. Web site
Crocker. Industrial Archaeology of Surrey
Egham. Bowls Club. Web site
LAMAS. Transactions.
Runneymede District Council. Weh site

M25 Wraysbury Reservoir

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Post to the south M25



Wraysbury Reservoir
This reservoir more or less fills this square – it is also partly in squares to the north, west and south, with a smaller part in the squares to the east and north east.
Wraysbury Reservoir. This is a water supply reservoir  begun in 1967 and completed by W. & C. French in 1970. It has a a capacity of 34,000 million litres and is owned and operated by Thames Water. It receives 400 million litres of water via its inlet pier in the north west section of the reservoir which is pumped from an inlet off the Thames at Datchet.  The outlet tower is in the centre of the southern section of the reservoir. Thames Water maintains a flock of sheep to keep the grass short on the earthen banks. In 1999 it was designated as a Site of Special Scientific Interest because it supports nationally important numbers of wintering cormorant, great crested grebe, and shoveler duck. It also has numbers of wintering gadwall. It also has quagga mussels which are, apparently, not a good thing. The reservoir was in Buckinghamshire from 1971 to 1974 and a boundary line ran through the centre of it, following the line of the County Ditch which had been the boundary between Middlesex and Buckinghamshire. From 1974 the reservoir was partly in Berkshire and partly in Greater London until 1991, since when it is countred as being in Greater London
Inlet pier
Outlet post
Coal post. This  City Coal Tax marker stood at a site which would now be in the reservoir.  It was in a field fence east of Moor Farm. It was taken off by the local authority in 1966 when the reservoir was built. It is thought to be the one moved to Wraysbury Road in 1990 east of 115 and the County Ditch

Sources
City Posts. Web site
Wikipedia. Wraysbury Reservoir. Web site

M25 Iver Heath

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Post to the east Uxbridge
Post to the north Dromenagh


Bangors Road North
The Black Horse. This large corner pub appears to date from the 1930s. It is a Hall and Woodhouse house. Near to Pinewood Studios it has been used as a film location – including the pub in ‘Carry on Dick’  with Sid James.

M25

Slough road
Chandlers Hill. Remains of Second World War Anti  Aircraft Battery. Bases of huts are scattered in an area of rough ground along the road side with a track through centre. The next field is on top of gthe hill; at this must have been where the gun emplacements were but the area is now planted with trees. The battery was part of the Slough Gun Defended Area.  The site is said to be clearly visible on aeriel photographs of the 1950s and 60s. A magnetometer survey identified a widespread zone of magnetic debris a that may be associated with the former anti aircraft battery
Gallow Hill Farm. The name of Gallow Hill for part of Slough Road seems to have currently gone out of use. References to it can however be found in 1517.
Iver Environment Centre . This is a two acre wildlife garden where individuals and community groups can come and take part in organised activities for educational, environmental or therapeutic purposes.
Moorwards Farm. This has an equestrian coaching facility
Woodlands Park. There was a golf club here between 1930 and 1940. This was the home of Charles Fairy who founded Fairey Aviation and the site was used by him and his firm. It was the address of the company from 1960 The Fairey Aviation Company Limited was an aircraft manufacturer of the first half of the 20th based in Hayes in Middlesex, and other places outside the London area. It is important for the design of a number of military aircraft and had a strong presence in the supply of naval aircraft, and built bombers for the RAF. After the Second World War the company diversified into mechanical engineering and boat-building. Following a series of mergers and takeovers, the principal successor businesses to the company now trade as under other names,
Mansfield Farm. This includes three houses but still appears to operate as a farm. It dates from the 16th and its outbuildings include a 17th barn and a slightly later dovecote . To the east , is the
site of the former manor house

Sources
Black Horse. Web site
Buckinghamshire County Council. Web site
Flight International. Archive. Web sie
Golf’s Missing Link. Web site
National Archives.  Web site
Pub History. Web site
Wikipedia. Fairey Group.

M25 Iver Heath The Clump

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Post to the east Dromenagh
Post to the north Gossams Wood


M25


Pinewood Green
Housing Estate. Much used as a film location due to its nearness to the studios – see ‘Carry on at Your Convenience’., “Carry on Camping”.

Seven Hills Road
Long Coppice. Belt of woodland which runs parallel and north of the road
Seven Hills Farm, this is no longer an active farm.
Lady Yorke Park. A managed  estate in a parkland setting.
Belle Farm
Dromenagh Farm
Living Props. founded in 1991 Living Props work in thge provision of set dressing, greenery hire and prop hire to Film, TV, Photographic Studios and Corporate Event/Parties.

The Clump
This is a large woodland area known as The Clump since the 1820s . It consists of broadleaved woodland with mature range of native trees - Oak, Birch, Willow, Sycamore and Hawthorn. The hedgerows mentioned extend across the site and connect to The Clump. It is unfenced and is accessible.. Several clearings exist, which are dominated by bracken and areas of dead-wood. The Clump is clearly marked on the Bryant map of 1825 and it likely that it was preserved as a distinctive element of woodland during the Enclosure process, In 1940 a Sergeant Hutchinson was shot down by a Messerschmitt nearby. The exact location of the crashed aeroplane is not known.

Sources
Living Props.. Web site
Reel Streets. Web site
South Buckinghamshire Council. Web site

M25 Alderbourne

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Post to the south Junction 16
Post to the north Tatling End



Broadspring Wood
Ancient woodland within the Colne Valley Regional Park.

Fulmer Lane
Alderbourne Lodge. This is a cottage ornee from the early 19th with a thatched roof overhanging on rustic posts. There is a circular floor area beneath and there is a porch with timber-framed gable. It is a  lodge to Alderbourne Manor.
Alderbourne Manor, This land belonged to Alderwyke Priory, Wraysbury and was once known as Nutting Grove. In the 1830s it was then a working farm. ItIt was sold in 1907 and sold again in 1926 as a large house and grounds., The sites of early medieval kilns have been found in the grounds.  It is now let into flats.
Alderbourne Manor Farm.

Gladwyns Wood

Hawkswood Lane
Hawks Wood
Hawkeswood House. This is the headquarters of the Jalaram Jyot Trust,  This is a Hindu organisation connected to a Mandir in Brent. It undertakes and grant funds charitable works in that area.

St. Huberts Lane
Old Prestwick – old site which means Priest’s Farm. It is an 18th red brick  house. There is also an 18th timber framed barn. This was once the home of Laurence Olivier and Vivian Leigh.
Little Prestwick. Became Neo-Gothic in the 1960s
Prestwick Farm

M25

Sources
British Listed Buildings. Web site
Buckinghamshire County Council. Web site
Hansard
Historic England. Web site
Hunt and Thorpe, Gerrards Cross
Jalaram Jyot Trust. Web site
Pevsner. Buckinghamshire

M25 Denham Lane

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Post to the south Chalfont Park
Post to the east Chalfont Old Shire Lane



Denham Lane
Warren Farm.
Warren Farm Quarry. This appears to be active for the extraction of sand and hoggin. It is also partly a traveller site and operates for landfill.
Paccar Scout Camp. This dates from 1938 when an anonymous donor provided the money for its purchase by The Scout Association. It was used for scouts to camp until in 1970 Greater London Middlesex West took over the site as its County campsite and Training Centre. In 2008, following a donation of £500,000 from the PACCAR Foundation, the site name was changed to PACCAR Scout Camp from Chiltern Heights Scout Camp.
Mopes Farm house. This is a 16th timber-framed house. Successively some well known actors have lived there. It is said now to be in a state of disrepair.
Barn. This is early 18th timber framed and weather boarded, and with a central wagon entry. The south bay is part of 18th Mopes Farm Cottage
Barn, 18th barn, timber framed.
Gerrards Cross Golf Course. The course was established in 1922, in the grounds of Chalfont Park and the remains of the ha-ha can be seen near the 18th hole. It was opened in 1922 but the layout has changed partly due to road building in the area.

M25

Sources
British Listed Buildings. Web site
Buckinghamshire County Council. Web site
Chiltern District Council. Web site
Gerrards Cross Golf Club. Web site
Paccar Scout Camp. Web site

M25 Chalfont. Old Shire Lane


M25 Chalfont Lane

M25 Maple Cross

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Post to the south Chalfont Lane
Post to the east Maple Cross
Post to the north Rickmansworth Bottom Wood


Beechen Wood
This small wood has some semi-mature trees which probably  date from the 19th including ash, beech, rowan and oak. There are also bluebells, wood anemone and the enchanter's nightshade.  The wood is owned by Three Rivers Council and there is a small play area on the edge of the wood.


Chalfont Road

Franklin’s Spring
Wood. This is an remnant ancient semi – natural woodland owned and managed by Three Rivers District Council.  It is mainly of beech with some oak. The understory is Hazel, Hawthorn and some Holly,  There aren also wood anemones and and bluebells.
Chalk Cliff. – this is said to be a chalk pit used as a rubbish tip

Hornhill Road
Local Authority housing

M25

Sources
Three Rivers District Council. Web site
Woodland Trust. Web site

M25 Rickmansworth Bottom Wood

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Post to the south Maple Cross
Post to the east Maple Cross


Bottom Wood
Wood. In this wood all except the perimeter trees were cut down during the Second World War to make rifle butts.  There are bluebells, oxalis, yellow angel, woodruff and coral root which is only found in South West Hertfordshire.

Chalfont Road

M25

Nottingham Road
This square covers a tiny corner of Heronsgate, the Chartist settlement, which is now a conservation area.
Bircham Cottage. This is one of the original Chartist settlement houses – this was O'Connorville founded by Feargus O'Connor, Chartist leader, as the first settlement under his Land Plan, and a precursor of Garden Cities.  It was originally two houses built in 1846-7 for Chartist Co-operative Land Company. In the pediment is a rectangular panel with sides extended downwards, and this is used throughout O'Connorville.
Beaumont House School. This ran as a school until 1973.  The building dates from 1905 and is now divided into two separate dwellings.

Pollards Hill Wood

Sources
British Listed Buildings. Web site
Colne Valley Regional Park. Web site
Three Rivers Council. Web site

M25 Rickmansworth Shepherd's Lane

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Post to the south Maple Cross



Mill Way
Shepherd Primary School
Rickmansworth Children’s Centre

M25
Junction 17. Maple Cross Interchange, This was built with the A405  in 1976.

Shepherds Lane
Jehovahs Witness Kingdom Hall 
William Penn Leisure Centre

Sources
Jehovah’s Witnesses. Web site
SABRE. Web site
Shepherd Primary School. Web site
William Penn Leisure Centre. Web site.

M25 Chorleywood Dog Kennel Lane

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Post to the south Rickmansworth Shepherds Lane
Post to the east Rickmansworth Solomons Wood


Berry Lane
The Fringe. ~Wooded area and wildlife site
Chorleywood Common
Chorleywood Golf Course. The club was founded in 1890 and is the oldest club in Hertfordshire. It was originally an 18 hole course with 2 holes across the railway and in 1922 the course was reduced to 9 holes and laid out by James Braid. In the Great War the Common was used for bombing practice and later 150 live grenades were cleared.  In the Second World War  the clubhouse became as an emergency first aid post for the ARP. The new Clubhouse was opened in 1990.
Dog Kennel Lane
Black Horse. This pub is said to be in an 18th building but as a public house it dates from the mid-19th having previously been on the other side of the lane in what is now Constable’s Cottage – in the square to the north,.
Post Pox– a Ludlow box stands opposite The Black Horse
Dog Kennel Cottages. 1 is a timber-framed building in a red-brick casing. It was originally the chauffeur’s cottage for South Cottage. This area was part of the original entrance to South Cottage, the garden and grounds of which have now been built on.  A small gas works was attached to the original house, a not unusual arrangement in the 19th

M25
This was the North Orbital Road later upgraded to be part of the M25

Pheasants Wood
This is mature beech and hornbeam, ancient woodland site bisected by the M25. There is also birch, hazel, hawthorn and holly. With some rhododendron and cherry laurel, and also some yew. There are deer and rabbits – including muntjac.

Shepherds Lane
Catlips Farm, Livery Stables.

Sources
Black Horse. Web site
Chorleywood Golf Club. Web site
SABRE. Web site
Three Rivers Council. Web site

M25 Rickmansworth Solomon's Wood

M25 Sarratt Great Wood

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Great Wood
This is mixed deciduous and coniferous woodland.It is said to he  at least 600 years old and maybe once used for pannage. It has now been re-planted with Lodgepole Pines, and patches of Oak and Hazel.

M25

Sarratt Road
Coltyard Spring
Coltyard Spring Riding Stables. Livery stables

Sawpit Spring
Nature Reserve

Sources
Coltyard Spring Riding Stables  Web site
Sarratt Village. Web site
Three Rivers Council. Web site

M25 Chandlers Cross

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Post to the west Great Wood


Chandlers Lane
Chandlers Cross. An outlying settlement of Saratt
Pottens Farm. Equestrian and Livery. The farm house is 16th later rebuilt, refronted and extended. It has a timber frame with a brick front. Pump from the 19th  in cast iron with a large circular drum on the side. There is moulded tracery on each side.
Barn. This is south of Pottens Farm. It is 17th with a timber frame on a brick base and weatherboarded.
Yew Court Farmhouse. This is 18th and is red brick partly stuccoed.
Barn and Coachhouse. This is north east of Yew Court Farm House. The barn is  17th or 18th wirh a timber frame and an 18th red brick casing . Above is a dovecote and some weatherboarding. There is also a 19th stable lean-to at the back. The coachhouse is weatherboarded with a timber clock turret
Cartshed. This is at Yew Court Farm. It is 18th in Red and stock brick with a weatherboarded gable
Yew Court Lodge. This is made up of two barns which were part of Yew Court Farm House and is now a now garage and housing converted in the 20th.  They are timber framed and weatherboarded.
White House. Pump. This is 19th made by Braithwaite, London in cast-iron and painted green.
Chandlers Farm, House. 15th house which was changed in the 17th and brick cased in the 18th. It has a timber frame
Barn. This is to the south east of Chandlers Farm House. It is 17th or 18th with a timber frame and, weatherboarded.
Victorian posting box in front of the Chandlers Farm Barn

M25

Redhall Lane
Clarendon. This is, or was, a pub which became an expensive restaurant. It was built in the early 19th for Clutterbuck’s Brewery and extended since. Recent archaeological work has found rwo wells in what is now the car park but was previously the site of two cottages.
St. Marks. This tin tabernacle was built in 1903 and in use until 1978 as a Mission church.  It closed in 1978 and was sold into private hands in 1981 and is now in the front garden of a house.

Sheepyard Spring

Templepan Lane

White Shack Lane
Birch Spring. Nature reserve
Long Pightle Caravan Park 

Sources
Archaeology Data Service. Web site
British Listed Buildings. Web site
Hertfordshire Churches. Web site
Historic England. Web site
Three Rivers Council. Web site

M25 Langleybury Lane

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Beechen Bottom
Woodland and wildlife site. Some old quarry and chalk pit sites within it.

Brickfield Spring
Woodland with evidence of old quarry site.

Fir Tree Hill
Great Westwood Quarry. Fir Tree Hill itself and the southern part of this quarry are in the square to the south. The quarry is operated as an aggregate and landfill site by Cemex. It is described as a key site for the early history of the Thames with the best known exposure of the "Lower Gravel Train", a deposit laid down when the Thames flowed through the Vale of St Albans, before around 450,000 years ago, finds have included volcanic pebbles from Wales.  A Bronze Age ringwork has been found here and an Iron Age/Roman enclosure  system. It also seems to be used for war games

Langleybury Lane
Langleybury Playing Fields. This is football pitches
South Lodge. The lodge to Langleybury House

M25
Junction 19. This is an interchange built in 1986 on what was then the Rickmansworth bypass and constructed to divert the M25 away from Hunton Bridge and take it round the north of Watford.  The original route of the A405 can be seen as a section of tarmac alongside the slip on to the motorway.

Oldhouse Lane
Site between Motorway and Langley Lane. This is now a  Caravan Park on a previous cleared area with a cottage and described as agricultural land.
Gunman Airsoft.  This is a company providing war-type games. The site and cottages are previously described as for a gamekeeper and 'Little Liz".

Sources
Archaeology Database. Web site
Abbotts Langley Parish Council. Web site
Cemex. Web site
Gunman Airsoft. Web site
SABRE Web site
Three Rivers Council. Web site

M25 Langleybury

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Post to the south Langleybury Lane
Post to the north Kings Langley
Post to the east Hunton Bridge


Crabtree Dell
Woodland alongside the motorway

Dellshot Spring
Woodland alongside the motorway

Langleybury Fields
Berrybushes Farm. Livestock farm including rabbit breeding. They even have ploughing matches there.

Langleybury Lane
Langleybury House/School. The current house was built by Robert Raymond, Lord Chief Justice, in 1725-8 – this date is on the rainwater heads. He also laid out the park. It was later remodelled for W.J. Loyd, in the 1860s. It is in red brick with stone and stucco dressings. There is a timber bell- turret on the roof ridge. Inside is a Zodiac ceiling in the Library. It subsequently passed through a number of owners.  During the Second World War it was offices for the Equity and Law insurance Company. In 1947 it was turned into Langleybury School by Hertfordshire County Council  and later a modern school building was constructed adjoining tghe house. It closed in 1996 and became Social Services offices. It was sold in 2007 and is now linked as a development area to The Grove – which is two squares to the south. A development brief is in progress.
Red one Airsoft. Close Combat Battle games. This is a business in the old school buildings.
Langleybury Children’s Farm. This is in what was Home Farm. The Farm was later used by Langleybury School to teach rural studies, and many of the buildings date from that time – the shop, for instance, is the old classroom. The farm is now a tenant of The Grove and exists to allow children to see animals close up and learn about their lives and behaviour.
St.Paul’s Church of England Primary School. The school was moved to the current site in the 1960s having previously been in an older building.

Lukes Journey Spring
Woodland

M25

Springshot Spring
Woodland

Sources
Berrybushes Farm. Web site
Historic England. Web site
Langleybury Children’s Farm. Web site
St.Paul’s Primary School. Web site
Three Rivers Council. Web site
Wikipedia. Langleybury, Web site

M25 Kings Langley Egg Farm

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Post to the west Kings Langley



Egg Farm Lane
Ovaltine Egg Farm.. These were the Model Poultry Farm buildings from the 1930s thre architecture of which echoed the farm built by the French King, Louis XVI, for his Queen, Marie Antoinette. The Egg Farm, housed a laying flock of around 50,000 pullets, bred from pedigree White Leghorn stock. The Arts & Crafts style buildings featured a unique rearing house built in the form of a horseshoe, in order to catch as much sunlight as possible. Here the pullets were raised from 8 weeks to 3 months until they went out on range. The clever design and maintenance of the 'sun parlours' and rearing house meant that no artificial heat was needed and lighting, ventilation and cleanliness were of a high standard.
Beaufort Court. Renewable Energy System. This is part of the Sir Robert McAlpine group, and is involved in wind energy and the renewable energy market worldwide.  Offices. While the Ovaltine factory expanded and prospered chicken rearing at the Egg Farm ceased and the buildings were vacated. The buildings remained in good condition and were purchased by RES in 2000  who moved into a new office here in 2003. The original Egg Farm buildings form the basis for the low carbon building at Beaufort Court. the distinctive tiled roof structure and the two towers of the horseshoe were retained, but the rest of the building was modified and a new building was constructed, to provide storage for the harvested biomass crop. This is partly below ground with the inward-facing sloping roof carrying a large solar-cell array,
Numbers Farm. 1n 1929 the Ovaltine company bought what was then known as Numbers Farm, and created Ovaltine Farm; approximately 460 acres producing eggs, milk and barley. It is now a housing development.
Round Wood
Woodside Farm

Long Wood

M25


Sources
Renewable Energy Systems. Web site
Three Rivers Council. Web site

M25 Abbots Langley

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Post to the west Kings Langley Egg Farm


Bedmond Road
Midway. House with 17th origins
The Oaklands. Traveller community site.
2 Ovaltine Cottages. This is the former entrance to the Ovaltine Model Dairy Farm which was through the central arch. Now converted to housing.
Parsonage Farm.. The farm was acquired by Albert Wander owner of Ovaltine so that there was an extra supply of barley, eggs and milk at the height of demand. When the farm buildings ceased to be used they began to deteriorate and were sold, In the early 1990s, the buildings of Parsonage Farm were converted to residential and are now Antoinette Court. Parsonage farmhouse is a 19th buildimg of pebble dash with decorative flint. There is also a 17th aised barn, timber framed and weatherboarded.
Mansion House Farm. The farm house is 17th, extended in 18th and 19th It is in red brick with some timber framing. The original building was a long rectangle and may have been several buildings. There is a 17th wall painting of a house on the first floor end wall.
Mansion House Cottages. 17th terrace of houses from where a ‘Beating the Bounds’ walk would begin.

Dairy Way
Antoinette Court.This is a conversion of the Ovaltine model dairy farm built in 1932 and closed in 1979. The buildings were designed, as a replica of a farm built by Louis XVI for Queen Marie Antoinette, by J A Bowden. Sons & Partners. It lies behind Ovaltine Cottages on Bedmond Road

High Street
The High Street takes a sharp bend off Bedmond Road . This is because in 1759 Sir John Cope Freeman had the road diverted around a pond in front of his house.
Langley House. This was built in the 1770's by Sir John Cope Freeman who was a Jamaican plantation owner. It was enlarged in 1830. There were a succession of owners through the 19th and latterly the home of Lord Kindersley, Governor of the Bank of England. In 1929 it was bought by the Salvatorian Fathers of Wealdstone for their Novitiate. It was known as Breakspear College, a Roman Catholic Seminary. Later it  became the Breakspear Hospital which was a private clinic, specialising in environmental medicine and the treatment of allergies.  It is now flats.
Hannover Gardens. Hannover Housing Association sheltered housing block.
Margaret House. Quantum Care bungalow development care home.
St Lawrence. The church was dedicated in 1154 and is likely to have had a Saxon predecessor. The low tower was added later, between 1190 and 1200.  . The chancel chapel has a chequer pattern of flint and stone exterior mixed with brick, while the rest of the church is flint with stone dressings.  The interior of the church was badly damaged by fire in 1969. There is a painting of St Lawrence and St Thomas on the wall of the chancel chapel although much of what remains is Professor Tristram's 'restoration' of 1933-5. Plaque to Nicholas Breakspear, only Englishman to become Pope.
Churchyard. The churchyard is not a nature reserve but some areas of grass are not mown during the summer months which has enabled a Pyramidal orchid to grow. It also allows caterpillars time to pupate. There are over a hundred species of wild flowers here, as well as grasses, trees, lichens, mosses, fungi and church walls and headstones provide the conditions needed by slow-growing lichens.
War Memorial. This is on the edge of the churchyard and is a cross with a sword. It was designed by Sir Reginald Blomfield and made by H T Jenkins & Son of Torquay with sculpture by W Bainbridge Reynolds Ltd . It was dedicated on 21st December 1920. The inscription says  “ To the Glory of God and in memory of those from this Parish who fell in the Great War 1914-1918. There are 80 names from the Great War,  27 from the Second World War. 1 from Colonial India and 1 Non-Combat death.
Hertfordshire County Council Library. This was the site of an earlier school. It was built in the 1980s on a site near the Church of St Lawrence. The building was recognised by a Civic Trust commendation in 1984
15 this is on the site of the village workhouse which lay to the rear.
21 Boys Home Public House. The building projects forward onto the street.  The pub was established in 1842 and called the Rose and Crown. It became known locally as the ‘Boys Home’ to commemorate soldiers returning home from the Great War and the name was formally adopted in 1986.
Vicarage. This is a big and square early 18th building behind the church. Said to be haunted.
35 Kings Head. This dated from the 1880s and stood opposite the church lych gate. The site now seems to be a Chinese restaurant standing behind a large car park.
Henderson Memorial Hall,The hall was left in trust by the Henderson family to be used for the benefit of local residents. It had been bu8ot by Harry Henderson in memory of his wife. Since 2016 it has been managed by The Henderson Hub.

Love Lane
Reservoir. In 1866 the Abbots Langley Waterworks Company was set up after a tenants of Cecil Lodge, provided the capital.. Initially the Lodge’s water tower was employed but 1886 water was being pumped from a new artesian well at Hunton Bridge up to a specially built tank located off Love Lane
Reservoir Cottages

M25

Parsonage Road
Abbots Langley Primary School. Buildings of 1970 by the County Architect's Department. This was once a national school based in a site nearer to the church.

Summerhouse Way
Cecil Lodge. The road is built on the grounds of Cecil Lodge, which was part of the Earl of Salisbury’s estate in Hatfield. Later it was occupied by W.H Smith the newsagent. It is presumably where the summerhouse was.

St Lawrence Close
Abbots House.  This dates from 1600 on the site of a farmhouse. It was altered and heated in the mid 17th, then rebuilt around 1700 and truncated, but extended since. It was originally timber framed and later cased in red brick with some sham timber framing. It is thought that originally it was a hall or wing of the kind normally added to a large medieval open hall.  There is a conservatory.
Old Maltings. This includes the Kiln Stable Block and is a 17th Malt House.. It is timber framed with partial red brick casing with mock timber framing. The stable block is 19th brick and the Kiln is 18th’ The building was restored in 1975 and is now a house and community hall

The Crescent
St.Saviour's Roman Catholic Church. The church was founded in 1928 by the Society of the Divine Saviour (Salvatorians). They had come to Wealdstone in 1901 opening a school for boys. In 1928 they established a college and parish here in Langley House.  The current red brick church by John Rochford was built in 1963 and was sited next to the college.. The sculpture above the entrance is by David John cast in aluminium and filled with fibreglass.

Sources
Abbots Langley Primary School. Web site
Hannover Housing Associaiot. Web site
Henderson Hub. Web site
Hertfordshire Genealogy. Web site
Historic England. Web site
Imperial War Museum. Web site
Mee. Hertfordshire
Meullenkamp and Wheatley. Follies
Pevsner. Hertfordshire
Pub History. Web site
Quantum Care.Web site
St.Saviours Church. Web site
Three Rivers Council. Web site
Whitelaw. Hidden Hertfordshire
Whitelaw. Hertfordshire Churches
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